Pierce v. City of N.Y.

293 F. Supp. 3d 306
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedDecember 11, 2017
Docket16–cv–5703 (BMC)
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 293 F. Supp. 3d 306 (Pierce v. City of N.Y.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pierce v. City of N.Y., 293 F. Supp. 3d 306 (E.D.N.Y. 2017).

Opinion

COGAN, District Judge.

This § 1983 excessive-force action arose out of an incident that took place on Labor Day, 2015. A RadioShack manager accused plaintiff of trying to steal merchandise. When police approached plaintiff and the manager outside the store on the sidewalk of Flatbush Avenue and asked to search plaintiff's bag, plaintiff, who at the time was a recreations manager and former personal trainer, took off running down the sidewalk. An officer gave chase on foot, and a nearby police car joined the pursuit, proceeding south on Flatbush Avenue to try to get ahead of plaintiff. Plaintiff then darted out into the middle of Flatbush Avenue-the busiest street in Downtown Brooklyn-and made contact with the near corner of the police car, falling to the ground. He stood up immediately and was arrested. Plaintiff was taken to the hospital where he reported pain in his right knee and right hand; he was prescribed Tylenol and promptly released to police custody. Pictures of him taken shortly after the incident showed, at most, a few scrapes on his face and right knee.

Based on these undisputed facts, a jury somehow found that the police officer who was driving the car intentionally or with reckless indifference used excessive force on plaintiff by causing or allowing contact with the police car. The jury also found that the sergeant sitting in the front seat was liable for failing to intervene, presumably by not preventing the impact.

Juries usually get it right, or at least decide cases within a zone of reason, but this one did not. There was no credible evidence that the police-officer driver intended contact with plaintiff at all. And there was no evidence that the sergeant could have taken any action to prevent contact between plaintiff and the vehicle. I therefore grant the sergeant's motion for judgment as a matter of law on the failure-to-intervene claim against him, and order a new trial as to the police-officer driver on the excessive-force claim, because that verdict was against the clear weight of the evidence.

BACKGROUND

Plaintiff Lerin Piece filed this action on October 12, 2016, against the City of New York and certain individual police officers, alleging, inter alia , excessive force by the officers who effected his arrest on September 1, 2014. After extensive proceedings before this Court, including numerous discovery disputes and motion practice, the case advanced to trial the week of June 12, 2017.

At trial, the factual narrative developed as follows: plaintiff was accused of stealing a cellphone or phone charger by the manager of a RadioShack on Flatbush Avenue in downtown Brooklyn. Plaintiff denied stealing and left the store. Officer Zeeshan Taqi, an NYPD officer who was patrolling in the area, responded to a call about the alleged RadioShack incident. Officer Taqi encountered plaintiff on the sidewalk next to Flatbush Avenue and began discussing what happened with plaintiff and the RadioShack manager. While this conversation was happening, Sergeant Ivan Mercado and Officer Sonia Belardo, two more NYPD officers who had been alerted to *310the incident, arrived in a marked police car. Officer Belardo was the driver that day. In the backseat of their squad car was Ahsin Rafique, a RadioShack employee who had contacted the police about the incident with plaintiff.

At some point during their conversation, Officer Taqi told plaintiff he was going to be handcuffed. At trial, Officer Taqi testified that one of the reasons he wanted to handcuff plaintiff was because the RadioShack manager had told him that plaintiff had a knife in his pocket.

Plaintiff, upon being told he was going to be handcuffed, took off. He ran south on the sidewalk on the west side of Flatbush Avenue. Plaintiff testified that he was running "more fast than I would normally." Officer Taqi ran after him on foot; Sergeant Mercado and Officer Belardo followed in their squad car, with the lights and sirens on. Plaintiff testified that he heard the sirens from Officer Belardo's police car and that he recognized a second, tan vehicle pursuing him with lights and sirens as an unmarked police car.

When plaintiff was about midway down the block between Lafayette Avenue and State Street, plaintiff turned and tried to run across Flatbush Avenue, and was struck by the passenger-side front bumper of Officer Belardo's police car. Plaintiff testified that the car struck his left side. Although not relevant for this motion (because the jury found his testimony on this point not credible), plaintiff alleged that the officers who arrested him after he collided with the car used excessive force, specifically, that they kicked him and punched him in the face. Plaintiff testified that he blacked out, saw a white light, and heard ringing noises because of these blows.

When plaintiff testified about the collision at trial, he said that he "didn't see the car when [he] was struck." Plaintiff testified on cross-examination that he could not tell how fast the police car was going, but that he saw it accelerate to hit him.

Rafique, the RadioShack employee who was in the back seat of Officer Belardo's police car during the chase, estimated that the car was going approximately 40-45 mph from the time the officers got into it until the car stopped. Rafique testified that plaintiff "was trying to cross the street, it sort of looked like he was stumbling, and that's when he ran directly in front of the car." Contrary to plaintiff's testimony, Rafique testified that when plaintiff ran in front of the car, Officer Belardo braked to avoid hitting him; he clarified that car didn't speed up and didn't turn to hit plaintiff. According to Rafique, Officer Belardo said "oh sh**" when plaintiff ran out in the street, but did not say anything else during the drive, and Sergeant Mercado did not say anything to her.

Sergeant Mercado testified that traffic prevented the police car from going more than 20-25 mph while pursuing plaintiff, and that, because Officer Belardo braked once plaintiff ran into the road, the car was going "very slow" when it hit plaintiff.

Officer Belardo testified that while they were pursuing plaintiff in the squad car, traffic prevented her from driving any faster than plaintiff and Officer Taqi were running. She testified that she saw plaintiff run out across Flatbush Avenue, where an unmarked police car had stopped in front him, and that, in response, plaintiff did "a little zigzag" to avoid the officers exiting the unmarked vehicle and ran toward her car. Officer Belardo testified that as soon as she realized that she and plaintiff were going to collide she "slammed on [the] brakes," and that because she braked so hard, the car was stopped when plaintiff hit it. Officer Belardo said the only reason plaintiff hit her car was because he did not see her.

After he was arrested, plaintiff was taken to Brooklyn Hospital. According to the *311hospital report, plaintiff said he was "clipped on his left side by a car," and complained of pain in his right knee and hand. The report stated that plaintiff said he was dizzy when he was first admitted, but during his evaluation he said that he was not dizzy and that he did not lose consciousness or hit his head during the incident. The hospital report noted that plaintiff's back was not tender, and did not mention plaintiff complaining of back pain.

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293 F. Supp. 3d 306, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pierce-v-city-of-ny-nyed-2017.